The final stage of the Build Station Warsaw program took place in Warsaw — a large-scale incubator for Web3 developers that lasted ten days and brought together over 200 participants from various countries in Europe. At the event known as Warsaw Demo Day, participants presented more than 30 innovative on-chain projects aimed at advancing decentralized technologies, blockchain, and artificial intelligence.
This is reported by Business • Media
Opening of Demo Day and Presentation Format
The event began with a panel discussion on the topic “Stablecoins: Opportunities and Challenges” featuring experts from institutions such as Bank Pekao S.A., PKO Bank Polski, and Lazarski University. During the discussion, experts highlighted how the traditional financial system integrates with innovative solutions, as well as the role of stablecoins in bridging the worlds of Web2 and Web3.
After the discussion, startup teams were given three minutes to present their projects and two minutes to answer questions from the jury. The evaluation focused on technical implementation, innovation, and practical utility of the developments.
Top Four Web3 Projects at Warsaw Demo Day
Among more than 30 teams, the expert jury identified four leaders:
- Alyra — winner of the Incrypted grant. The project allows any application to integrate multi-chain swaps and bridges through a single API or SDK, uniting liquidity from different blockchains while ensuring transparency, modularity, and security.
- TRUSTBYTES — winner of Mastercard Track (first place). The developers presented a smart treasury platform for institutional wallets with integrated analytics, liquidity, and automation for asset management in both on-chain and off-chain markets.
- Pool Keeper — second place in Mastercard Track. The product, built on Solana, allows users to track historical APR, receive AI-driven profitability analytics, and efficiently rebalance liquidity on DEXs with a single click.
- Sentience — third place in Mastercard Track. This AI system filters out informational noise and helps both humans and automated systems make effective decisions.
The participants demonstrated a high level of technical expertise and creativity, as well as a focus on solving real problems in the financial and technological sectors.
The organizers emphasized that Warsaw Demo Day marks not an end, but the beginning of a new wave of European Web3 innovations. Many teams will continue to develop their products at the Colosseum Cypherpunk Hackathon, where they will have the opportunity to present their developments to a global audience.
“The European Web3 ecosystem is alive, ambitious, and evolving faster than ever. […] the future of open innovation is already happening — and it’s on the blockchain.”